“Is she dead?” a voice asked. “Is she dead?”
“She’s dying,” someone else replied. “She’ll be dead before the ambulance arrives. They shouldn’t have moved her. They shouldn’t have moved her.”
All the crowd faces—familiar, yet unfamiliar, bending over, looking down, looking down.
“Hey, mister, stop pushing.”
“Who you shovin’, buddy?”
Spallner came back out, and Morgan caught hold of him before he fell. “You damned fool. You’re still sick. Why in hell’d you have to come down here?” Morgan demanded.
“I don’t know, I really don’t. They moved her, Morgan, someone moved her. You should never move a traffic victim. It kills them. It kills them.”
“Yeah. That’s the way with people. The idiots.”
Spallner arranged the newspaper clippings carefully.
Morgan looked at them. “What’s the idea? Ever since your accident you think every traffic scramble is part of you. What are these?”
“Clippings of motor-car crackups, and photos. Look at them. Not at the cars,” said Spallner, “but at the crowds around the cars.” He pointed. “Here. Compare this photo of a wreck in the Wilshire District with one in Westwood. No resemblance. But now take this Westwood picture and align it with one taken in the Westwood District ten years ago.” Again he motioned. “This woman is in both pictures.”
Coincidence. The woman happened to be there once in 1936, again in 1946.”
“A coincidence once, maybe. But twelve times over a period of ten years, when the accidents occurred as much as three miles from one another, no. Here.” He dealt out a dozen photographs. “She’s in all of these!”
“Maybe she’s perverted.”
“She’s more than that. How does she happen to be there so quickly after each accident? And why does she wear the same clothes in pictures taken over a period of a decade?”
“I’ll be damned, so she does.”
“And, last of all, why was she standing over me the night of my accident, two weeks ago!”
They had a drink. Morgan went over the files. “What’d you do, hire a clipping service while you were in the hospital to go back through the newspapers for you?” Spallner nodded. Morgan sipped his drink. It was getting late. The street lights were coming on in the streets below the office. “What does all this add up to?”
“I don’t know,” said Spallner, “except that there’s a universal law about accidents. Crowds gather. They always gather. And like you and me, people have wondered year after year, why they gathered so quickly, and how? I know the answer. Here it is!”
He flung the clippings down. “It frightens me.”
“These people—mightn’t they be thrill-hunters, perverted sensationalists with a carnal lust for blood and morbidity?”
Spallner shrugged. “Does that explain their being at all the accidents? Notice, they stick to certain territories. A Brentwood accident will bring out one group. A Huntington Park another. But there’s a norm for faces, a certain percentage appear at each wreck.”
Morgan said, “They’re not all the same faces, are they?”
“Naturally not. Accidents draw normal people, too, in the course of time. But these, I find, are always the first ones there.”
“Who are they? What do they want? You keep hinting and never telling. Good Lord, you must have some idea. You’ve scared yourself and now you’ve got me jumping.”
“I’ve tried getting to them, but someone always trips me up, I’m always too late. They slip into the crowd and vanish. The crowd seems to offer protection to some of its members. They see me coming.”
“Sounds like some sort of clique.”
“They have one thing in common, they always show up together. At a fire or an explosion or on the sidelines of a war, at any public demonstration of this thing called death. Vultures, hyenas or saints, I don’t know which they are, I just don’t know. But I’m going to the police with it, this evening. It’s gone on long enough. One of them shifted that woman’s body today. They shouldn’t have touched her. It killed her.”
He placed the clippings in a briefcase. Morgan got up and slipped into his coat. Spallner clicked the briefcase shut. “Or, I just happened to think . . .”
“What?”
“Maybe they wanted her dead.”
“Why?”
“Who knows. Come along?”
“Sorry. It’s late. See you tomorrow. Luck.” They went out together. “Give my regards to the cops. Think they’ll believe you?”
“Oh, they’ll believe me all right. Good night.”
Spallner took it slow driving downtown.
“I want to get there,” he told himself, “alive.”
He was rather shocked, but not surprised, somehow, when the truck came rolling out of an alley straight at him. He was just congratulating himself on his keen sense of observation and talking out what he would say to the police in his mind, when the truck smashed into his car. It wasn’t really his car, that was the disheartening thing about it. In a preoccupied mood he was tossed first this way and then that way, while he thought, what a shame, Morgan has gone and lent me his extra car for a few days until my other car is fixed, and now here I go again. The windshield hammered back into his face. He was forced back and forth in several lightning jerks. Then all motion stopped and all noise stopped and only pain filled him up.
He heard their feet running and running and running. He fumbled with the car door. It clicked. He fell out upon the pavement drunkenly and lay, ear to the asphalt, listening to them coming. It was like a great rainstorm, with many drops, heavy and light and medium, touching the earth. He waited a few seconds and listened to their coming and their arrival. Then, weakly, expectantly, he rolled his head up and looked.
The crowd was there.
He could smell their breaths, the mingled odors of many people sucking and sucking on the air a man needs to live by. They crowded and jostled and sucked and sucked all the air up from around his gasping face until he tried to tell them to move back, they were making him live in a vacuum. His head was bleeding very badly. He tried to move and he realized something was wrong with his spine. He hadn’t felt much at the impact, but his spine was hurt. He didn’t dare move.
He couldn’t speak. Opening his mouth, nothing came out but a gagging.
Someone said, “Give me a hand. We’ll roll him over and lift him into a more comfortable position.”
Spallner’s brain burst apart.
No! Don’t move me!
“We’ll move him,” said the voice, casually.
You idiots, you’ll kill me, don’t!
But he could not say any of this out loud. He could only think it.
Hands took hold of him. They started to lift him. He cried out and nausea choked him up. They straightened him out into a ramrod of agony. Two men did it. One of them was thin, bright, pale, alert, a young man. The other man was very old and had a wrinkled upper lip.
He had seen their faces before.
A familiar voice said, “Is—is he dead?”
Another voice, a memorable voice, responded, “No. Not yet. But he will be dead before the ambulance arrives.”
It was all a very silly, mad plot. Like every accident. He squealed hysterically at the solid wall of faces. They were all around him, these judges and jurors with the faces he had seen before. Through his pain he counted their faces.
The freckled boy. The old man with the wrinkled upper lip.
The red-haired, red-cheeked woman. An old woman with a mole on her chin.
I know what you’re here for, he thought. You’re here just as you’re at all accidents. To make certain the right ones live and the right ones die. That’s why you lifted me. You knew it would kill. You knew I’d live if you left me alone.
And that’s the way it’s been since time began, when crowds gather. You murder much easier, this way. Your alibi is very simple; you didn’t know it was dangerous to move a hurt ma
n. You didn’t mean to hurt him.
He looked at them, above him, and he was curious as a man under deep water looking up at people on a bridge. Who are you? Where do you come from and how do you get here so soon? You’re the crowd that’s always in the way, using up good air that a dying man’s lungs are in need of, using up space he should be using to lie in, alone. Tramping on people to make sure they die, that’s you. I know all of you.
It was like a polite monologue. They said nothing. Faces. The old man. The red-haired woman.
Someone picked up his briefcase. “Whose is this?”
It’s mine! It’s evidence against all of you!
Eyes, inverted over him. Shiny eyes under tousled hair or under hats.
Faces.
Somewhere—a siren. The ambulance was coming.
But, looking at the faces, the construction, the cast, the form of the faces, Spallner saw it was too late. He read it in their faces. They knew.
He tried to speak. A little bit got out:
“It—looks like I’ll—be joining up with you. I—guess I’ll be a member of your—group—now.”
He closed his eyes then, and waited for the coroner.
JACK-IN-THE-BOX
He looked through the cold morning windows with the Jack-in-the-Box in his hands, prying the rusted lid. But no matter how he struggled, the Jack would not jump to the light with a cry, or slap its velvet mittens on the air, or bob in a dozen directions with a wild and painted smile. Crushed under the lid, in its jail, it stayed crammed tight coil on coil. With your ear to the box, you felt pressure beneath, the fear and panic of the trapped toy. It was like holding someone’s heart in your hand. Edwin could not tell if the box pulsed or if his own blood beat against the lid.
He threw the box down and looked to the window. Outside the window the trees surrounded the house which surrounded Edwin. He could not see beyond the trees. If he tried to find another World beyond them, the trees wove themselves thick with the wind, to still his curiosity, to stop his eyes.
“Edwin!” Behind him, Mother’s waiting, nervous breath as she drank her breakfast coffee. “Stop staring. Come eat.”
“No,” he whispered.
“What?” A stiffened rustle. She must have turned. “Which is more important, breakfast or that window?”
“The window . . .” he whispered and sent his gaze running the paths and trails he had tried for thirteen years. Was it true that the trees flowed on ten thousand miles to nothingness? He could not say. His sight returned defeated, to the lawn, the steps, his hands trembling on the pane.
He turned to eat his tasteless apricots, alone with his mother in the vast and echoing breakfast room. Five thousand mornings at this table, this window, and no movement beyond the trees.
The two of them ate silently.
She was the pale woman that no one but the birds saw in old country houses in fourth-floor cupola windows, each morning at six, each afternoon at four, each evening at nine, and also passing by one minute after midnight, there she would be, in her tower, silent and white, high and alone and quiet. It was like passing a deserted greenhouse in which one last wild white blossom lifted its head to the moonlight.
And her child, Edwin, was the thistle that one breath of wind might unpod in a season of thistles. His hair was silken and his eyes were of a constant blue and feverish temperature. He had a haunted look, as if he slept poorly. He might fly apart like a packet of ladyfinger firecrackers if a certain door slammed.
His mother began to talk, slowly and with great caution, then more rapidly, and then angrily, and then almost spitting at him.
“Why must you disobey every morning? I don’t like your staring from the window, do you hear? What do you want? Do you want to see them?” she cried, her fingers twitching. She was blazingly lovely, like an angry white flower. “Do you want to see the Beasts that run down paths and crush people like strawberries?”
Yes, he thought, I’d like to see the Beasts, horrible as they are.
“Do you want to go out there?” she cried, “like your father did before you were born, and be killed as he was killed, struck down by one of those Terrors on the road, would you like that!”
“No . . .”
“Isn’t it enough they murdered your Father? Why should you even think of those Beasts!” She motioned toward the forest. “Well, if you really want to die that much, go ahead!”
She quieted, but her fingers kept opening and closing on the tablecloth. “Edwin, Edwin, your Father built every part of this World, it was beautiful for him, it should be for you. There’s nothing, nothing, beyond those trees but death; I won’t have you near it! This is the World. There’s no other worth bothering with.”
He nodded miserably.
“Smile now, and finish your toast,” she said.
He ate slowly, with the window reflected in secret on his silver spoon.
“Mom . . . ?” He couldn’t say it. “What’s . . . dying? You talk about it. Is it a feeling?”
“To those who must live on after someone else, a bad feeling, yes.” She stood up suddenly. “You’re late for school! Run!”
He kissed her as he grabbed his books. “Bye!”
“Say hello to teacher!”
He fled from her like a bullet from a gun. Up endless staircases, through passages, halls, past windows that poured down dark gallery panels like white waterfalls. Up, up through the layer-cake Worlds with the thick frostings of Oriental rug between, and bright candles on top.
From the highest stair he gazed down through four intervals of Universe.
Lowlands of kitchen, dining room, parlor. Two Middle Countries of music, games, pictures, and locked, forbidden rooms. And here—he whirled—the Highlands of picnics, adventure, and learning. Here he roamed, idled, or sat singing lonely child songs on the winding journey to school.
This, then, was the Universe. Father (or God, as Mother often called him) had raised its mountains on wallpapered plaster long ago. This was Father-God’s creation, in which stars blazed at the flick of a switch. And the sun was Mother, and Mother was the sun, about which all the Worlds swung, turning. And Edwin, a small dark meteor, spun up around through the dark carpets and shimmering tapestries of space. You saw him rise to vanish on vast comet staircases, on hikes and explorations.
Sometimes he and Mother picnicked in the Highlands, spread cool snow linens on red-tuffed, Persian lawns, on crimson meadows in a rarefied plateau at the summit of the Worlds where flaking portraits of sallow strangers looked meanly down on their eating and their revels. They drew water from silver taps in hidden tiled niches, smashed the tumblers on hearthstones, shrieking. Played hide-and-seek in enchanted Upper Countries, in unknown, wild, and hidden lands, where she found him rolled like a mummy in a velvet window drape or under sheeted furniture like a rare plant protected from some wind. Once, lost, he wandered for hours in insane foothills of dust and echoes, where the hooks and hangers in closets were hung only with night. But she found him and carried him weeping down through the leveling Universe to the Parlor where dust motes, exact and familiar, fell in showers of sparks on the sunlit air.
He ran up a stair.
Here he knocked a thousand thousand doors, all locked and forbidden. Here Picasso ladies and Dali gentlemen screamed silently from canvas asylums, their gold eyes burning when he dawdled.
“Those Things live out there,” his mother had said, pointing to the Dali-Picasso families.
Now running quickly past, he stuck out his tongue at them.
He stopped running.
One of the forbidden doors stood open.
Sunlight slanted warm through it, exciting him.
Beyond the door, a spiral stair screwed around up in sun and silence.
He stood, gasping. Year after year he had tried the doors that were always found locked. What would happen now if he shoved this one full open and climbed the stair? Was some Monster hiding at the top?
“Hello!”
His voi
ce leapt up around the spiraled sunlight. “Hello . . .” whispered a faint, far lazy echo, high, high, and gone.
He moved through the door.
“Please, please, don’t hurt me,” he whispered to the high sunlit place.
He climbed, pausing with each step to wait for his punishment, eyes shut like a penitent. Faster now, he leapt around and around and up until his knees ached and his breath fountained in and out and his head banged like a bell and at last he reached the terrible summit of the climb and stood in an open, sun-drenched tower.
The sun struck his eyes a blow. Never, never so much sun! He stumbled to the iron rail.
“It’s there!” His mouth opened from one direction to another. “It’s there!” He ran in a circle. “There!”
He was above the somber tree barrier. For the first time he stood high over the windy chestnuts and elms and as far as he could see was green grass, green trees, and white ribbons on which beetles ran, and the other half of the world was blue and endless, with the sun lost and dropping away in an incredible deep blue room so vast he felt himself fall with it, screamed, and clutched the tower ledge, and beyond the trees, beyond the white ribbons where the beetles ran he saw things like fingers sticking up, but he saw no Dali-Picasso terrors, he saw only some small red-and-white-and-blue handkerchiefs fluttering high on great white poles.
He was suddenly sick; he was sick again.
Turning, he almost fell flat down the stairs.
He slammed the forbidden door, fell against it.
“You’ll go blind.” He crushed his hands to his eyes. “You shouldn’t have seen, you shouldn’t, you shouldn’t!”
He fell to his knees, he lay on the floor twisted tight, covered up. He need wait but a moment—the blindness would come.
Five minutes later he stood at an ordinary Highlands window, looking out at his own familiar Garden World.
He saw once more the elms and hickory trees and the stone wall, and that forest which he had taken to be an endless wall itself, beyond which lay nothing but nightmare nothingness, mist, rain, and eternal night. Now it was certain, the Universe did not end with the forest. There were other worlds than those contained in Highland or Lowland.
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